1988–89 First Vienna FC season

Vienna
1988–89 season
Coach Ernst Dokupil
Stadium Hohe Warte Stadium,
Vienna, Austria
1. Division 5th
ÖFB-Cup Quarter-finals
UEFA Cup Second Round
Top goalscorer League:
Andreas Heraf (9)

All:
Andreas Heraf (10)
Alfred Drabits (10)
Gerhard Steinkogler (10)
Highest home attendance 7,000[1]
Lowest home attendance 1,000[2][3]

The 1988–89 season ended for First Vienna FC with a fifth-place finish in the domestic league. This qualified the club for the 1989–90 UEFA Cup and was their second and up to now last appearance in a European competition.

Squad

Squad and statistics[4][5]

No. Pos Nat Player Total1. DivisionAustrian Cup[6]UEFA Cup[7]
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Goalkeepers
GK Austria Gottfried Angerer 4403604040
GK Austria Werner Hebenstreit 10100000
Defenders
DF Austria Thomas Niederstrasser 3833024140
DF Czechoslovakia Jiří Ondra 4113314040
DF Hungary Zoltán Péter 2571962140
DF Austria Kurt Russ 4363564040
DF Austria Christian Salaba 1101001000
DF Austria Peter Webora 2211702130
Midfielders
MF Austria Gerald Glatzmayer 4193473042
MF Austria Andreas Heraf 41103493140
MF Austria Ewald Jenisch 3522924020
MF Finland Kimmo Lipponen 1621412100
MF Austria Norbert Lindner 1501302000
MF Austria Ernst Mader 3863263030
MF Austria Josef Marko 120803010
MF Austria Helmut Slezak 1721511110
MF Austria Stefan Szabo 30300000
Forwards
FW Austria Alfred Drabits 27102272231
FW Austria Andreas Nader 50500000
FW Austria Gerald Schober 10000010
FW Austria Gerhard Steinkogler 42103474241
FW Austria Günther Vidreis 4243543040

References

  1. "Vienna vs. Austria Wien". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  2. "Vienna vs. LASK". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  3. "Vienna vs. Sturm Garz". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  4. "Season overview with all line ups". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  5. "Vienna squad list". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  6. "Austrian Cup 1988-89". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  7. "UEFA Cup 1988-89". austriasoccer.at. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.